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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Baptism is
one of those things that started out being fairly simple and became
increasingly complex. Nothing could
have been much simpler than John the Baptist’s program of reform and
commitment. The Messiah was coming,
ushering in a new age. John called on
people to get ready for the great Day of the Lord. Be baptized, he said. But let the outward baptism signify an inner
change of heart and life. What could be
plainer?

Jesus
identified with John’s movement. It was
not a mystery as to why he was baptized.
He believed in the message that John was preaching and either saw
himself as the fulfillment of it or supportive enough of it to engage in what
John’s community clearly saw as the rite that glued them together.

According
to the New Testament, Jesus did not baptize, but only his disciples. Even after the Jesus Movement became distinct
from the Movement of John the Baptist, Jesus’ disciples continued to practice
baptism, which, so far as we know, continued to mean what it had meant when
John and his disciples had done it.

But then
there came the death and resurrection of Jesus.
One can imagine the first baptism that someone tried to administer after
that. Going underneath the water and
coming back up again—or having oneself thoroughly soused with poured water—all
just looks too much like a death and a resurrection to be ignored. So very early on, Early Christians practiced
baptism not just as an outward cleansing symbolizing an inner reformation, but
as a kind of ritual death and rebirth.
Candidates for baptism went down into the water nude, like babies from
the womb or like corpses, take your pick.
Down into the dark waters of death they went, crossing a river, as it
were, that separated them from everything in the old life that they had left
behind. They came up out of the water, were clothed in white, were anointed
with oil, and were accepted into the fellowship of the New Community.

That, of
course, was not the stopping place for the development of baptism. It was to go through numbers of changes
through the ensuing centuries. But that
point was the single most definitive stage in the history of baptism. From then on, it would be impossible to see
baptism as essentially an individual thing. It was clearly an act of initiation into a
community.

If the
Church had remembered and believed that, Christian history would have gone
quite differently from how it has.
Baptism has been, at one time or another, tied up in ideas about sin and
salvation, about heaven and hell, about who does and who does not get to
receive Communion. I would argue that
the single most important development in the last century in the Church was a
thorough re-thinking of baptism. We
pulled it from the realm of a precious little private ceremony done with fancy
dresses and candles on a Saturday afternoon or some other such time, into the
full, public liturgy of assembled Christians.
We began reworking what it meant to be initiated into Christian
community. We started imagining how we
might become more conscious of baptism as a way of life, one that is
ever-unfolding. We moved away from
thinking of baptism as a discrete event, over and done with and soon forgotten. So it is possible today, at least among
Episcopal congregations, to talk about “our baptismal covenant” and have a
great many people actually know what you are talking about.

A part of
this whole story was the emergence of the Baptism of Christ as a major
festival, which we celebrate today. The
Book of Common Prayer recognizes Epiphany as a season, not simply as “ordinary
time.” The season is defined by two
poles, both of which have to do with the revelation of the two natures of
Christ, human and divine. One is the
Baptism of Christ, always the First Sunday after the Epiphany, and the other is
the Transfiguration of Christ, always the Last.
Put it that way and suddenly the lights come on. What Jesus models for us is how human and
divine natures can (and should) coexist in the same person and be at peace with
one another. Without at all depreciating
the specialness of Jesus, Eastern Christianity has always gotten that. The purpose of the whole process of
salvation, they see, is theosis, or
the divinization of the human being. One
way of looking at that is to see that the whole point of membership in the
Church is that we together take on the characteristics of God. Some of this is behavioral. But it is not merely behavioral. We don’t become like God just by being on our
best behavior, but by allowing our minds to be changed, our spirits to be
opened to mystery, our souls to be stretched.
We are engaged in a process of continual transformation, a process that
begins with baptism and extends into the life beyond death. It is not time-bound or body-bound. It is eternal. And every bit of us is caught up in the
transformation brought about by the indescribable grace of God.

So what
happens when we baptize an Oscar Malec, for example? Is there a way of
understanding the event at the center of our liturgy today that brings all this
stuff about baptism down to the piece of earth that Oscar and we occupy? Well, let’s talk about Oscar for a
minute. First of all, Oscar was born
into the human family a relatively short while ago. I remember it well. I went to see him and told Alys that even at
a few days of age he was a son that Danny couldn’t deny. Oscar was a complete little human being, not
defective at all. From the moment of
birth he possessed the fullness of human nature, the same as everyone else. It happened that Oscar got sick last May when
Pentecost rolled around and thus missed his baptism. But Oscar didn’t miss out on God’s love one
mite by missing his baptism that day.
He has continued to grow, to develop a distinct personality, and in his
second year now, is beginning to evince more and more the characteristics of
his parents. In fact Oscar has been very
much a member of this community, despite the fact that he has not been
baptized. No one would doubt that in
practical terms. Indeed his Christian
formation has already begun. Then why
baptize him, you might ask. For the same
reason that sometimes a couple who have shared quite a life together, sometimes
for years, choose to get married formally and officially. They want to make public and explicit what
has been informal and assumed. Baptism
is the way that we formally initiate Oscar into the fellowship of Christ’s
Body, the Church. In bringing him to baptism,
his parents are specifically saying to us that Oscar now is ours as much as
theirs, in a spiritual and pastoral sense.
Their parental duties are not discharged fully. But our responsibility to a fellow member,
Oscar, have now officially begun.

So how does
this process of transformation, or theosis,
or divinization take place in Oscar? And
how can we tell that it is happening?
Well, let’s be honest about it.
Danny and Alys, his godparents, and the rest of us will do our best to
bring him up to know and to love God.
We’ll do that by giving him the opportunity to take his place in the
assembly of Christians. By learning the
Big Story of creation, fall, and redemption, Oscar will likely come to view his
life in terms of that story. Through
Godly Play, involvement in the liturgy, through interactions with others in the
community, he will learn to meditate, to pray, to recognize when he falls short
and to mark it with appropriate confession and repentance. He will learn little by little to live the
story, perhaps first by trying on the costume of a shepherd or a sheep during a
Christmas Eve liturgy, later by lighting and carrying candles, perhaps later
still by reading lessons or, if he is musical, playing an instrument or
singing. So it will go, and in the
process, we hope, Oscar will learn some things about Jesus, and be attracted to
Jesus enough to imitate him in his relationships. He will begin to observe and copy the
behavior of his community and that of his family, so that striving for justice
and peace will be for him a reality, not just an airy idea. With luck (we call it “grace,”) by the time
Oscar is, say, eighteen or twenty, we will be able to look at him and say,
“Oscar you are a real person. And we see
Jesus’ life really living in you.”

Now, I am
no prophet. But I am intuitive. And I suspect that there will be days in
Oscar’s life when he will be anything but divine, or even cheaply angelic. I suspect that there may be in his future a
suspension, a heartache, perhaps a heart-to-heart talk from his parents. That will be because Oscar is a real person,
not because he is necessarily flawed (any more than any of us is flawed). But it won’t matter in the long run, because
Oscar will be engaged in a process of taking on the characteristics of God. And one of those characteristics, perhaps the
basic one, is being honest, being truthful.
Living the life of God (being “divinized”) is not putting on an act and
pretending a level of holiness that is not real. You can't have the Truth without God, and you can't have God without Truth. So becoming like God is being honest, being truthful, being
totally without pretense, precisely because there is nothing to gain by
pretending anything.

This is, of
course, just a sketch of what Oscar’s life will be like. The sketch is far less interesting than the
real work of art will be, and that is already in progress. But the sketch does have this value: it reveals, even in rough form, that Oscar,
like all of us, is peculiarly created with the capacity of becoming something
more than just the Oscar we see on the outside.
There is a dimension to Oscar that we cannot see, though we know it is
there because we have that dimension too.
It is the dimension of surprising himself, and perhaps others, by
exercising a love beyond ordinary expectations, care exceeding reasonable
bounds, passion surpassing what human animals might be supposed to manifest,
and a hope that only the courageous would dare exercise. Those things add up to a divine nature that,
little by little, even rough-and-tumble little boys take on, to the point that
they become themselves epiphanies of God, sons of the Most High in whom God is
well pleased.

Frank Gasque Dunn

About Me

I am a spiritual guide (a “soul friend”), offering coaching, counseling, and support to individuals and organizations. I founded and am Executive Director of Jonathan’s Circle, a non-profit organization enabling men to realize wholeness connecting sex and spirit. Read more at thesoulinyou.com.
I was for twelve years Senior Priest of St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church, Washington, DC. Prior to that I led parishes in North Carolina, Connecticut, and Virginia.

Welcome to The Book of Common Moments

On this blog I reflect on common moments. Some of those reflections are sermons and other things I have shaped for oral communication. Some are more precise reflections on incidents in mine and others' lives. Some are poems, short stories, essays. I invite you to join in the dialogue.

All our stories amount to an infinite number of variations on a handful of great themes. Becoming conscious of our stories is perhaps the biggest adaptive challenge for human beings. When we begin to know what stories we are telling and living, we stand a better chance of choosing those stories that are true.

Do not believe it because someone said it, or because it is in a book, or because you read it on the internet, or because that is what you were taught in school, church, temple, or Boy Scouts. Believe it only when you have tested it in your own life and find that you can affirm it in the deepest part of your soul.

Destiny

Your soul knows the geography or your destiny. Your soul alone has the map of your future, therefore you can trust this indirect, oblique side of yourself. If you do, it will take you where you need to go, but more important it will teach you a kindness of rhythm in your journey.